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CIVIL NUCLEAR
Iran to take control of Russian-built reactor 'Monday'
by Staff Writers
Tehran (AFP) Sept 22, 2013


Rowhani says West must accept Iran right to enrich uranium
Tehran (AFP) Sept 22, 2013 - President Hassan Rowhani said Sunday that Western governments must recognise Iran's right to enrich uranium in any deal to allay their concerns about its nuclear programme.

Rowhani said that should extend to "all rights of the Iranian nation, particularly nuclear rights and the right to enrich uranium on its territory within the framework of international rules".

His comments, at an annual military parade, came on the eve of his departure for the UN General Assembly in New York where he is scheduled to meet French President Francois Hollande on the sidelines.

"If they (Western governments) accept these rights, the Iranian people are a rational people, peaceful and friendly. We stand ready to cooperate and together we can settle all the region's problems and even global ones," Rowhani said.

"The Iranian people want development and are not looking to make an atomic weapon."

Iran claims the right to enrich uranium for peaceful purposes under the terms of the nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty.

But the UN Security Council has imposed successive rounds of sanctions on Iran for failing to heed ultimatums to suspend the sensitive activity, which Western governments suspect conceals a covert drive for a weapons capability.

Rowhani, a moderate on Iran's political scene, has made several diplomatic overtures since his election in June, and there has been speculation that he could also meet US President Barack Obama on the sidelines of the General Assembly, which opens on Tuesday.

Iran will take control of a Russian-built nuclear power station at Bushehr on its Gulf coast on Monday, Iranian Atomic Energy Agency chief Ali Akbar Salehi said.

"Tomorrow (Monday) the 1,000 megawatt Bushehr nuclear power station will be handed over to Iran," Salehi told the official IRNA news agency on Sunday.

"But for another two years it will be under Russian guarantee and a number of Russian experts will remain in place to give advice and technical assistance," he added.

Salehi is to join Russian officials at the plant for an official handover ceremony on Monday.

He said he expected work to start soon on a second nuclear power plant on completion of talks with Moscow.

"Negotiations are continuing and are well-advanced," he said. "Work will start soon," he added, without giving a date.

Construction of the Bushehr plant started in the 1970s with the help of German company Siemens, which quit the project after the 1979 Islamic revolution over concerns about nuclear proliferation.

In 1994, Russia agreed to complete the plant and provide fuel for it for 10 years, with the supply deal committing Iran to returning the spent fuel, amid Western concerns over its controversial uranium enrichment programme.

Work began in 1995 but it was completed only in 2011 after multiple delays, and full capacity was achieved only this year after further hitches.

Gulf Arab states have expressed concern about the plant but Iran and Russia say it is subject to International Atomic Energy Agency safeguards.

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Tokyo (AFP) Sept 19, 2013
Japan's prime minister was due Thursday to tour the crippled Fukushima nuclear plant less than two weeks after he assured the world it was "under control" - despite huge problems at the site. The pledge by Shinzo Abe was seen as key to Tokyo's successful bid to host the 2020 Olympic Games. His visit comes as it emerged that just months after the March 2011 disaster, authorities allowed ... read more


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